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    Cane Corso coat issues: best budget omega supplement

    This is a specific conversation about Dog skin allergies — practical help — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    Skin allergies are honestly one of the most frustrating things dog owners deal with — they're chronic, genuinely hard to pin down, and usually need a multi-pronged approach rather than one quick fix. The first fork in the road is almost always figuring out whether the trigger is environmental (pollen, grass, dust mites) or food-related, because those lead you down very different paths. To point you in the right direction: what breed and age is your dog, what symptoms are you actually seeing, does it seem to flare seasonally, and have you had a chance to speak to a vet yet?
    He's a 1-year-old Cane Corso. His coat looks really dull and a bit flaky, and he scratches more than I'd expect. No obvious hot spots or anything dramatic. I haven't been to the vet yet — I was wondering if it might just be a nutrition gap since he's been growing so fast. I'm on a tight budget so I don't want to spend a fortune on supplements.
    inparticular.ai
    That makes a lot of sense. Cane Corsos do a huge amount of growing in that first year, and the body genuinely prioritises muscle and bone over coat quality when resources are stretched — so dull, flaky skin alongside faster-than-average growth is a really common pattern in large breeds at this age. Before we go further: is the flaking evenly spread across his body, or concentrated anywhere specific like the base of the tail, belly, or ears? And is his current food a large-breed puppy formula, or has he already transitioned to adult food?
    It's pretty even all over, nothing concentrated. He moved onto an adult large-breed dry food about six weeks ago — decent mid-range kibble. No real change since the switch, if anything it started before that.
    inparticular.ai
    Good context — the fact that it predates the food switch and is evenly distributed rather than patchy points strongly toward a nutritional gap rather than an allergy or contact reaction. A mid-range kibble is fine, but the omega-3 levels in most dry foods simply aren't high enough to support the skin and coat demands of a rapidly growing giant breed. This is fixable without spending much. The product I'd go with is YuMOVE Skin & Coat Care BOOST — it's a concentrated liquid you squeeze onto food, based on omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids with added biotin and zinc. It's formulated specifically for coat condition, it's one of the better-value options per dose on Amazon UK, and for a dog his size the bottle lasts a reasonable amount of time. You should see a noticeable difference in coat sheen and reduced flaking within four to six weeks. I'd still recommend a vet check if things haven't improved after a couple of months, just to rule out an underlying thyroid issue — but honestly, for what you're describing, this is almost certainly the fix.
    That sounds really straightforward. How much would I be giving him at his size, and is liquid better than capsules for a big dog?
    inparticular.ai
    For a Cane Corso at around 12 months he'll likely be sitting somewhere between 40–50kg, so you'd follow the large dog dosing on the label — typically a measured pump or two over his food once a day. Liquid is genuinely better value per dose than capsules for big dogs, because capsule packs are often sized for smaller breeds and you'd burn through them quickly. Liquid also absorbs a bit more readily mixed into food, and most dogs take to it without any fuss since it doesn't have a strong smell. The BOOST version is the one to get rather than the standard YuMOVE Skin & Coat — it's higher concentration, so the cost per dose works out lower at his size.
    Perfect, that's exactly what I needed. I'll grab that and give it a few weeks.
    inparticular.ai
    Great call. Give it a solid six weeks before judging — coats respond slowly because you're waiting for new hair to grow through. If you're not seeing any improvement by then, or if the scratching gets worse rather than better, that's when it's worth getting a vet to check thyroid function and do a basic skin scrape. But my money's on the omega top-up doing the job here. Good luck with him — Corsos are brilliant dogs.

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